The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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CHAPTER XII.  
"Strange theory!" cried I.  
"Strange in what? According to all the doctrines of the Church, the  
world will have an end. Science teaches the same fatal conclusions.  
Why, then, is it strange that the same thing should result from moral  
Doctrine? 'Let those who can, contain,' said Christ. And I take this  
passage literally, as it is written. That morality may exist between  
people in their worldly relations, they must make complete chastity  
their object. In tending toward this end, man humiliates himself. When  
he shall reach the last degree of humiliation, we shall have moral  
marriage.  
"But if man, as in our society, tends only toward physical love, though  
he may clothe it with pretexts and the false forms of marriage, he will  
have only permissible debauchery, he will know only the same immoral  
life in which I fell and caused my wife to fall, a life which we call  
the honest life of the family. Think what a perversion of ideas must  
arise when the happiest situation of man, liberty, chastity, is looked  
upon as something wretched and ridiculous. The highest ideal, the best  
situation of woman, to be pure, to be a vestal, a virgin, excites fear  
and laughter in our society. How many, how many young girls sacrifice  
their purity to this Moloch of opinion by marrying rascals that they  
may not remain virgins,--that is, superiors! Through fear of finding  
themselves in that ideal state, they ruin themselves.  
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Quick Jump
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